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2016 云南高考英语真题及答案
注意事项:
本试卷分第 I 卷(选择题)和第 II 卷(非选择题)两部分。考试结束后.将本试卷和答题卡一并交回。
第I卷
注意事项:
1.答第 I 卷前,考考生务必将自己的姓名、考生号填写在答题卡上。
2.选出每小题答案后,用铅笔把答题卡上对应的题目的答案标号涂黑。如需改动,用橡皮擦干净后,在选
涂其他答案标号。不能答在本试卷,否则无效。
第一部分阅读理解(共两节,满分 40 分)
第一节(共 15 小题;每小题 2 分,满分 30 分)
阅读下列短文,从每题所给的四个选项(A、B、C 和 D)中,选出最佳选项,并在答题卡上将该项涂
黑。
A
Music
Opera at Music Hall: 1243 Elm Street. The season runs June through August, with
additional performances in March and September. The Opera honors Enjoy the Arts
membership discounts. Phone: 241-2742.
Chamber Orchestra: The Orchestra plays at Memorial Hall at 1406 Elm Street, which
offers several concerts from March through June. Call 723-1182 for more information. http:
//www.chamberorch.com.
Symphony Orchestra: At Music Hall and Riverbend. For ticket sales, call 381-3300.
Regular season runs September through May at Music Hall in summer at Riverbend.
College Conservatory of Music (CCM): Performances are on the main campus( 校园 ) of
the university, usually at Patricia Cobbett Theater. CCM organizes a variety of events,
including performances by the well-known LaSalle Quartet, CCM’s Philharmonic Orchestra,
and various groups of musicians presenting Baroque through modern music. Students with
I.D. cards can attend the events for free. A free schedule of events for each term is
available by calling the box office at 556-4183.
Riverbend Music Theater: 6295 Kellogg Ave. Large outdoor theater with the closest seats
under cover (price difference).Big name shows all summer long! Phone:232-6220.
1. Which number should you call if you want to see an opera?
A. 241-2742.
B. 723-1182.
C. 381-3300.
D. 232-6220.
2. When can you go to a concert by Chamber Orchestra?
A. February.
B. May.
C. August.
D. November.
3.Where can students go for free performances with their I.D. cards?
A. Music Hall.
B. Memorial Hall.
C. Patricia Cobbett Theater. D. Riverbend Music Theater.
4. How is Riverbend Music Theater different from the other places?
A. It has seats in the open air.
B. It gives shows all year round.
C. It offers membership discounts.
D. It presents famous musical works.
B
On one of her trips to New York several years ago, Eudora Welty decided to take a couple
of New York friends out to dinner. They settled in at a comfortable East Side cafe and within
minutes, another customer was approaching their table.
“Hey, aren’t you from Mississippi?” the elegant, white-haired writer remembered being
asked by the stranger. “I’m from Mississippi too.”
Without a second thought, the woman joined the Welty party. When her dinner partner
showed up, she also pulled up a chair.
“They began telling me all the news of Mississippi,” Welty said. “I didn’t know what my
New York friends were thinking.”
Taxis on a rainy New York night are rarer than sunshine. By the time the group got up to
leave, it was pouring outside. Welty’s new friends immediately sent a waiter to find a cab.
Heading back downtown toward her hotel, her big-city friends were amazed at the turn of
events that had changed their Big Apple dinner into a Mississippi.
“My friends said: ‘Now we believe your stories,’” Welty added. “And I said: ‘Now you
know. These are the people that make me write them.’”
Sitting on a sofa in her room, Welty, a slim figure in a simple gray dress, looked pleased
with this explanation.
“I don’t make them up,” she said of the characters in her fiction these last 50 or so
years. “I don’t have to.”
Beauticians, bartenders, piano players and people with purple hats, Welty’s people
come from afternoons spent visiting with old friends, from walks through the streets of her
native Jackson, Miss., from conversations overheard on a bus. It annoys Welty that, at 78,
her left ear has now given out. Sometimes, sitting on a bus or a train, she hears only a
fragment(片段) of a particularly interesting story.
5. What happened when Welty was with her friends at the cafe?
A. Two strangers joined her.
B. Her childhood friends came in.
C. A heavy rain ruined the dinner.
D. Some people held a party there.
6. The underlined word “them” in Paragraph 6 refers to Welty’s
A. readers
B. parties
.
C. friends D. stories
7. What can we learn about the characters in Welty’s fiction?
A. They live in big cities.
B. They are mostly women.
C. They come from real life.
D. They are pleasure seekers.
C
If you are a fruit grower—or would like to become one—take advantage of Apple Day to
see what’s around. It’s called Apple Day but in practice it’s more like Apple Month. The day
itself is on October 21, but since it has caught on, events now spread out over most of
October around Britain.
Visiting an apple event is a good chance to see, and often taste, a wide variety of
apples. To people who are used to the limited choice of apples such as Golden Delicious and
Royal Gala in supermarkets, it can be quite an eye opener to see the range of classical
apples still in existence, such as Decio which was grown by the Romans. Although it doesn’t
taste of anything special, it’s still worth a try, as is the knobbly( 多疙瘩的) Cat’s Head which
is more of a curiosity than anything else.
There are also varieties developed to suit specific local conditions. One of the very best
varieties for eating quality is Orleans Reinette, but you’ll need a warm, sheltered place with
perfect soil to grow it, so it’s a pipe dream for most apple lovers who fall for it.
At the events, you can meet expert growers and discuss which ones will best suit your
conditions, and because these are family affairs, children are well catered for with applethemed fun and games.
Apple Days are being held at all sorts of places with an interest in fruit, including stately
gardens and commercial orchards( 果园).If you want to have a real orchard experience, try
visiting the National Fruit Collection at Brogdale, near Faversham in Kent.
8.What can people do at the apple events?
A. Attend experts’ lectures.
B. Visit fruit-loving families.
C. Plant fruit trees in an orchard. D. Taste many kinds of apples.
9.What can we learn about Decio?
A. It is a new variety.
B. It has a strange look.
C. It is rarely seen now. D. It has a special taste.
10. What does the underlined phrase “a pipe dream” in Paragraph 3mean?
A. A practical idea. B. A vain hope.
C.A brilliant plan. D. A selfish desire.
11.What is the author’s purpose in writing the text?
A. To show how to grow apples.
B .To introduce an apple festival.
C. To help people select apples.
D. To promote apple research.
D
Bad news sells. If it bleeds, it leads. No news is good news, and good news is no news.
Those are the classic rules for the evening broadcasts and the morning papers. But now
that information is being spread and monitored( 监 控 ) in different ways, researchers are
discovering new rules. By tracking people’s e-mails and online posts, scientists have found
that good news can spread faster and farther than disasters and sob stories.
“The ‘if it bleeds’ rule works for mass media,” says Jonah Berger, a scholar at the
University of Pennsylvania. “They want your eyeballs and don’t care how you’re feeling. But
when you share a story with your friends, you care a lot more how they react. You don’t
want them to think of you as a Debbie Downer.”
Researchers analyzing word-of-mouth communication—e-mails, Web posts and reviews,
face-to-face conversations—found that it tended to be more positive than negative( 消极的),
but that didn’t necessarily mean people preferred positive news. Was positive news shared
more often simply because people experienced more good things than bad things? To test
for that possibility, Dr. Berger looked at how people spread a particular set of news stories:
thousands of articles on The New York Times’ website. He and a Penn colleague analyzed
the “most e-mailed” list for six months. One of his first findings was that articles in the
science section were much more likely to make the list than non-science articles. He found
that science amazed Times’ readers and made them want to share this positive feeling with
others.
Readers also tended to share articles that were exciting or funny, or that inspired
negative feelings like anger or anxiety, but not articles that left them merely sad. They
needed to be aroused(激发) one way or the other, and they preferred good news to bad. The
more positive an article, the more likely it was to be shared, as Dr. Berger explains in his
new book, “Contagious: Why Things Catch On.”
12 .What do the classic rules mentioned in the text apply to?
A. News reports.
C .Private e-mails.
B. Research papers.
D. Daily conversations.
13. What can we infer about people like Debbie Downer?
A. They’re socially inactive.
B. They’re good at telling stories.
C. They’re inconsiderate of others.
D. They’re careful with their words.
14.Which tended to be the most e-mailed according to Dr. Berger’s research?
A . Sports new.
B. Science articles.
C. Personal accounts. D. Financial reviews.
15 .What can be a suitable title for the text?
A. Sad Stories Travel Far and Wide
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